In Re Laszlo Marosi, Joachim Stabenow, and Matthias Schwarzmann

710 F.2d 799, 218 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 289, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13613
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1983
DocketAppeal 83-544
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 710 F.2d 799 (In Re Laszlo Marosi, Joachim Stabenow, and Matthias Schwarzmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Laszlo Marosi, Joachim Stabenow, and Matthias Schwarzmann, 710 F.2d 799, 218 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 289, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13613 (Fed. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

JACK R. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) Board of Appeals (“board”) affirming the examiner’s rejection of appellants’ claims 1 2-4, 11, 13, 15, 16, and 18-20, for anticipation, 35 U.S.C. § 102, or obviousness, 35 U.S.C. § 103, and indefiniteness, 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

THE INVENTION

Appellants claim a process for making zeolitic compounds. The various natural and synthetic zeolites are characterized by a microporous structure (with pores of approximately molecular dimensions) and are useful as ion exchange materials, molecular sieves, and catalysts. Zeolitic compounds are, perhaps, most valuable for their catalytic properties and are widely used in industrial processes such as the catalytic “cracking” of heavy (long-molecule) crude oil to produce lighter (shorter-molecule) fractions, such as gasoline. The number of prior cases involving zeolites is evidence of their commercial importance. 2

Typical prior art processes for synthesizing zeolitic compounds require the presence of alkali metal (added by use of sodium oxide — Na20), which must be removed from the resulting zeolite to make it suitable for use as a catalyst for certain processes (including cracking crude oil). See In re Best, 562 F.2d 1252, 195 USPQ 430 (CCPA 1977), involving a process for stabilizing zeolites from which sodium cations had been removed by ion exchange.

Appellants’ process does not require use of alkali metal in synthesizing zeolitic compounds, thereby eliminating the need for an ion-exchange step to remove the alkali metal from the resulting zeolite. Independent claim 18, from which the other appealed claims depend, is illustrative:

A process for the manufacture of a nitrogen-containing crystalline metal silicate having a zeolite structure which comprises:
adding a metal oxide, metal hydroxide, metal sulfate, metal nitrate or hydrated metal oxide and a silicon dioxide source that is essentially free of alkali metal to a 5 to 90% strength aqueous solution of *801 hexamethylenediamine to form a mixture that is essentially free of alkali metal;
stirring the mixture to form a homogeneous gel; and thereafter heating the gel to form the crystalline metal silicate; wherein said metal is selected from the group consisting of aluminum, boron, arsenic, antimony, vanadium, iron and chromium, and
whereby said crystalline metal silicate is essentially free of alkali metal.

Product claims 4,15, and 16 are directed to a zeolite manufactured by the claimed process.

PRIOR ART

The sole reference relied upon by the examiner and the board is United States Patent No. 4,139,600 to Rollmann et al., entitled “Synthesis of Zeolite ZSM-5.” Rollmann et al. teach a process for making a synthetic zeolite that, in its “as synthesized” form, has “extremely low sodium content and the same crystal structure as conventionally synthesized ZSM-5.” The Rollmann et al. process requires, as an essential ingredient, an alkali metal. The reference states:

In the present method of preparing a ZSM-5 crystalline aluminosilicate zeolite, a reaction mixture is prepared comprising sources of alkali metal, alumina, silica, organic nitrogen-containing cations, and water.

The mole ratio in the reaction mixture of alkali metal to silica, Si02 (the most plentiful component, besides water, by at least an order of magnitude), is: Broad — 0.01-3.0; Preferred — 0.1-2.0; Particularly Preferred —0.2-1.0. (Appellants’ calculations that a mole ratio of 0.01 corresponds to 3,819 parts per million (“ppm”) alkali metal are not contested.) Although the reference states that the zeolite, as synthesized, can be used “for a number of hydrocarbon conversion reactions” (which are not further specified), it then sets forth a detailed procedure for removing the “alkali metal, e.g. sodium, ions” from the zeolite through the use of conventional ion exchange techniques. The catalytic activity of the resulting ion-exchanged, alkali metal-free zeolite is described, thus:

The hereby prepared zeolite ZSM-5 may be used in a wide variety of organic compound, e.g. hydrocarbon compounds and oxygenates such as methanol, conversion processes. Such processes include, for example, alkylation of aromatics with olefins, aromatization of normally gaseous olefins and paraffins, aromatization of normally liquid low molecular weight paraffins and olefins, isomerization of aromatics, paraffins and olefins, dispropor-tionation of aromatics, transalkylation of aromatics, oligomerization of olefins and cracking and hydrocracking.

All of the examples in the Rollmann et al. specification use, as the source of silica, sodium silicate having 27.8% silica and 8.42% (or 84,200 ppm) sodium oxide, Na20.

Appellants rely solely on the absence of sodium in their starting materials to distinguish over Rollmann et al.

BOARD OPINION

The board held that the claim limitation, “essentially free of alkali metal,” does not satisfy the requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph:

The specification shall conclude with one or more claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the applicant regards as his invention.

The board explained:

We are well aware that the terminology employed in a claim does not stand alone but must be viewed in the light of the disclosure. However, even when the claims are read in this manner, we fail to find any disclosure in the specification that would tend to indicate just how much alkali metal could be present and still remain within the limitations set forth. Under ordinary circumstances, the disputed phrase would not form a significant part of the claimed subject matter; however, in the present case, it is the determining factor that appellants rely upon to distinguish over the applied prior art. Appellants argue that the composi *802 tions relative to freedom from alkali metal serve to distinguish over the prior art disclosure, but nowhere are we able to locate a teaching or disclosure that defines an upper limit that would create a patentable distinction over the prior art. As we find no adequate guidelines to the scope of the disputed phrase and in view of its importance in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter, we will affirm the rejection.

Because it did not consider that the limitation “essentially free of alkali metal” distinguished over what Rollmann et al.

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710 F.2d 799, 218 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 289, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-laszlo-marosi-joachim-stabenow-and-matthias-schwarzmann-cafc-1983.